Abstract

We investigated whether the adoptive transfer of H-2-incompatible lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells would efficiently demonstrate antitumor activity without damaging the normal host cells. Allogeneic LAK cells (5 × 10 7) did not cause graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in irradiated recipients, whereas more than half of the mice transferred with the same dose of fresh allogeneic spleen cells developed GVHD. Repeated transfer (three times at 4-day intervals, 1.2 × 10 8 cells/mouse) did not result in GVHD. Graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR), which is detectable by spleen enlargement of recipients transferred with allogeneic lymphoid cells was also absent in LAK cell-transferred mice of all strain combinations tested. Host immune responses were not affected in these mice. Therefore, it is feasible to transfer allogeneic LAK cells. With the antitumor efficacy of allogeneic LAK cells, they preferentially lysed allogeneic tumor targets. Adoptive transfer of the allogeneic LAK cells led to a significant decrease in the lung-colonizing foci of intravenously inoculated B16 melanoma cells. Allogeneic LAK cells and syngeneic ones were equally active, in vivo. The use of allogeneic LAK cells may prove to be a valuable method for effective clinical antitumor immunotherapy.

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